Five Reasons You Need to Give Ice Climbing a Try
Chillin' in Ricketts Glen State Park. (D. Herscovitch) |
Even after learning it existed, I couldn't believe people actually did it. But I tried it, learned more about it, and it's quickly becoming one of my favorite cold weather activities. Here are my top six reasons why you've got to add it to your list of sports to try.
(1) It just looks cool. This is indisputable. You're scaling frozen waterfalls, temporary structures, in the cold with sharp objects in your hands and attached to your feet. For some, the concept of climbing a wall of ice seems unfathomable. And if you add in the perceived danger factor, it's as cool as outdoor sports get (pun intended). And it's not just about how cool it looks to everyone else; it looks cool to me. It just looks like fun. As a good friend of mine and veteran ice climber since says, "when else will you be allowed to strap spikes onto your feet and wield a pair of axes?"
(2) Ice is really pretty, and every formation is completely unique. Ice can take so many incredible shapes. After you've tried ice climbing, you'll go back to the same formation a year, even a week later, and it will have changed. I visited Ricketts Glen State Park this weekend and the routes looked completely different than they did last year. Ice climbing is exciting partly because you are climbing a completely different medium. It can change in a way such that the same climb can have a very different feel a day later.
EMS climbing guide Matt looking super cool! |
(4) It's one more excuse to accumulate awesome new gear. Some of us outdoorsfolk love buying, renting, using and talking about cool new gear. There are so many varieties of crampons and ice tools to choose from, all specific to what you'll use them for. Then there are climbing harnesses, dry treated climbing ropes, climbing helmets, belay devices, hard shell pants and jackets, gloves, ice screws, screamers, the list is endless. (Yes, there is a sport in which one piece of protection is called a screamer.)
Friend Lauren's first time on ice! |
(5) If you want to climb big mountains, it's a skill you'll probably need. Though many snow and ice covered mountains, including Rainier and McKinley, have routes without vertical ice, many, many others do not. Even if you can climb one route on a mountain avoiding technical ice climbing, you might find the best route up that mountain requires ice skills. The bottom line - it's an important tool for anyone interested in technical alpine climbing.
I spent this Sunday out climbing ice in Ricketts Glen State Park with TerraMar Adventures and the Bloomsburg Quest program as an event organizer for the second year in a row. The event filled up within 24 hours of posting it on the TerraMar website, which says to me most people don't need a reason to try ice climbing. They're already psyched to learn about it! Bloomsburg Quest and the EMS Climbing School helped start me out ice climbing, and there are local guide organizations everywhere to help you get started.
Ice climbers, what are some of the reasons you'd give to someone who's never put tool to ice before?
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